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First published online on September 12, 2003.
Copyright © 2003 by The Physiological Society
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jphysiol.2003.048389v1
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Received June 2, 2003
Revised July 1, 2003
Accepted after revision September 9, 2003

Motor unit properties in the soleus muscle after its distal tendon transfer to the plantaris muscle tendon in the rat

Marie-Agnès Giroux-Metges1, Jean-Pierre Pennec1, Julien Petit2, Christelle Goanvec3, Germaine Dorange4, and Maxime Gioux5*

1 Laboratoire de Physiologie, Faculté de Médecine dBrest, France
2 Faculté des Sciences du Sport et de l'Education Physique, Pessac, France
3 Laboratoire de Physiologie, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Brest, France
4 Unité de Culture Cellulaire, Institut de Synergie des Sciences et de la Santé, Brest.
5 Laboratoire de Physiologie, Faculté de Médecine de Brest, France

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: maxime.gioux{at}univ-brest.fr.

The aim of this study was to evaluate how a modification in the mechanical conditions under which a muscle is used could induce changes in the characteristics and the spinal drive of its motor units (MU). The distal tendon of the soleus muscle of Wistar rats was transferred to the distal stump of the plantaris muscle tendon. The EMG activity of the soleus was chronically recorded for 8 weeks, every other day, during a 1-minute treadmill walk. After spinal ventral root splitting, individual MU contractile properties were measured in control soleus (102 MUs) or in transposed soleus muscles after 4 weeks (41 MUs) or 8 weeks (28 MUs). Muscle/body weight ratio did not vary after transposition, nor did MU tetanic forces. A decrease in MU twitch contraction times and in their half relaxation times was observed at weeks 4 and 8. MU tension-frequency curves varied significantly after tendon transfer, becoming closer to the curves of the fast MUs of the control group. During locomotion, we observed no change in the amplitude of rectified-filtered electromyographic activity, but a significant decrease in mean burst duration and an increase in the Median Frequency of the Power Density Spectrum. Tendon transposition of the soleus muscle brought about adaptations in MU contractile properties and soleus spinal control.


Key words: Motor unit • Tendon • Transplantation







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